Photobucket Cutesy Divider Pictures, Images and Photos
iLovePanda!

Photobucket R Creations © 2010 <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFhuQXIDCfA?hl=en&autoplay=1&loop=1&enablejsapi=1"><img src="http://www.gtaero.net/ytmusic/play.png" alt="Play" style="border:0px;" /></a>


Photobucket

thedarksideofnarnia:

prettytown:

i feel like this has a different meaning when the colors are reversed

The girl in white is admitting to herself that she has inner demons.. The girl in black is freeing herself of those demons.

my favorite gif ever.

I was not expecting that.

(Source: , via manda)

thatfunnyblog:

Cutting off hair in ancient Asia (Japan, china, Korea &amp; possibly some other Asian cultures) symbolizes being banished or rejected from their home. In the more modern age that is now, cutting long hair into a short cut means to forget the past, leaving the old and starting anew.

thatfunnyblog:

Cutting off hair in ancient Asia (Japan, china, Korea & possibly some other Asian cultures) symbolizes being banished or rejected from their home. In the more modern age that is now, cutting long hair into a short cut means to forget the past, leaving the old and starting anew.

image

image

image

image

(Source: goldilion, via rock-a-hoilc)

sexponents:

youthopian:

luzure:

horan-wasted:

lickinglesbians:

obamasvagina:

FUCK

im straight

WHO ARE YOU WHATS YOUR NAME

UNF

WHAAAAAA

his name is Julian Schratter

sexponents:

youthopian:

luzure:

horan-wasted:

lickinglesbians:

obamasvagina:

FUCK

im straight

WHO ARE YOU WHATS YOUR NAME

UNF

WHAAAAAA

his name is Julian Schratter

(Source: beachboysbeauty, via manda)

oecologia:

“In March, due to a natural phenomenon, Siberia’s Lake Baikal is particularly amazing to photograph. The temperature, wind and sun cause the ice crust to crack and form beautiful turquoise blocks or ice hummocks on the lake’s surface.”
Photograph by Alex El Barto.

oecologia:

“In March, due to a natural phenomenon, Siberia’s Lake Baikal is particularly amazing to photograph. The temperature, wind and sun cause the ice crust to crack and form beautiful turquoise blocks or ice hummocks on the lake’s surface.”

Photograph by Alex El Barto.

(via rock-a-hoilc)